2005 H36 in "Fresh Breeze" conditions
Having never sailed SFO Bay, I don't know how relevant my Gulf of Maine experience is but I offer the following single data point, for what it's worth.Once again, yesterday I took Persephone for the 13 nm ride out to the Isles of Shoals and back at 7-7.5kts in 18-22kts of wind and 3-4ft "white horses" chop, both on the beam.Since I have an oversized custom mainsail (490sq-ft vs 426 for the standard main and 374 for the roller-furling main), I had to sail triple-reefed, which my full battens permit with good shape. I also had to put 6 wraps on the jib furler for balance and heel reduction. (Doyle put luff pads on the jib, so I can do this much furling with good shape, although I have to use the lazy sheet as a Barber-hauler in order to point high when doing so. )So trimmed, she sailed at a nice 15 degree heel, and gave me a moderately exciting but comfortable ride on auto-pilot. (5-6 degrees of weather helm, and only occasional spray into the cockpit when dropped off one fast-moving, close-spaced beam sea onto the next).Glen Henderson's finer/deeper bow-entry than on my previous '99H310 made the H36 a little wetter, but not by much; and the lack of the 310's pounding when I had to head up into the chop was well worth it.I have previously had her out in 20-25kts gusting over 30 in 8 ft seas, which she handled with aplomb. (I don't usually volunteer for more, and haven't thus far been caught in any. I only use her for short passages up and down the New England coast, not ocean-crossing.)She has a completely dry bilge and no leaks in almost 1900nm of sailing over 8 of the last 14 months. She may have a "cheap furniture" interior compared to more high-end boats, but she's not just "a lot of boat for the money." With the minor mods I put on her, she's a pretty capable lady who seems to look after me very well, as long as I look after her.(If sailed over-heeled and/or unbalanced she's cranky to steer, but I'd be too <g>.)